TOLWYN!!!!!!
Can you refer him to the guys who made that EPIC WIN wing commander movie?
You know the one...
Also, where did they get the Conferation uniforms?
I thought I mentioned in the credits who made the uniforms?
Anyway they are made by my mother. *Thanks mom* ^_^
I still have them and frankly, close up they don't look like much. Allways thought that I should get them into a better shape, put a "Wing Commander Saga Developer" logo on the back and wear it in public.
Bet I would create a new trend ^_^
Anyway, back to topic.
I never had the problem with my movie as its completly CGI created. So everything that should have an alpha had one from the beginning.
Still there are ways to get the background or lets better say a specific color out of a video material.
The magic word here is keying.
Be warned that, depending on the video material you have and the software you use, the result might not be that good.
As it was allready mentioned you need a pretty good contrast or a different color for the background to the stuff you want to remain.
For high contrast you can use a lumination key and for a different color you are using a color keyer.
From what I understand you have recorded a FS2 mission and now want to key out the background?
I would go back and edit the mission. Change the skybox to a complete green, purple, whatever color that is NOT on the objects you want to key.
Also make sure to deactivatet the envo mapping as this might result in fighters haveing a slight color tint from the skybox. That would result in semitransparant fighters.
Without knowing the material its pretty hard to say how to approach this at best.
When you want to edit still images, that is a lot easier but you could use the same methodes as with video material or you do it by hand. In most cases I do a mix of automatic tools and handwork.
Oh if you can allways use a non-destructive working methode. That way you can allways go back or later on change stuff you don't like.
I don't work with Gimp but in Photoshop there is a possibility to use layer masks. These allow you do key out stuff without realy deleting these parts.
Basicly you paint an alphamap right on the image with your paint tool. Its a very powerfull way to edit images as you can also use that mask as a real alpha-channel map later on.
Well I think that is, without knowing what you want to do in detail, as far as I can help you.